New Build - Tree VMC 1000
- dangercraft
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14 Aug 2012 23:36 #23215
by dangercraft
Replied by dangercraft on topic Re:New Build - Tree VMC 1000
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14 Aug 2012 23:41 #23216
by dangercraft
Replied by dangercraft on topic Re:New Build - Tree VMC 1000
The plate on the spindle motor has the following information on it:
Type: UAASKA-15CA1S
Phase: 3
Poles: 4
INS: F
KW: 15/11 RPM:1500 RATING: 30 Min. Cont.
KW: 15/11 RPM:6000 RATING: 30 Min. Cont.
AMP: 80/71A (at 15/11 KW)
VOLT: MAX 200V
RULE: JIS C 4004
JP44: JCAOF4S
Brg. No.: 6310M2ZZAC3P60 6210M2ZZAC3P60
SER.: S138421002
Type: UAASKA-15CA1S
Phase: 3
Poles: 4
INS: F
KW: 15/11 RPM:1500 RATING: 30 Min. Cont.
KW: 15/11 RPM:6000 RATING: 30 Min. Cont.
AMP: 80/71A (at 15/11 KW)
VOLT: MAX 200V
RULE: JIS C 4004
JP44: JCAOF4S
Brg. No.: 6310M2ZZAC3P60 6210M2ZZAC3P60
SER.: S138421002
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14 Aug 2012 23:45 - 14 Aug 2012 23:49 #23217
by dangercraft
Replied by dangercraft on topic Re:New Build - Tree VMC 1000
I am a little confused about the KW rating where it says 15/11. Usually this means for example 15 3P and 11 1P, but the plate only says 3P?
Also, I see what you mean about the two speeds, it says 1500 and 6000... but I thought the spindle drive varied the frequency and by extension the RPMs infinitely. Tried googleing for 2 speed induction motor but nothing particularly enlightening comes back. -Scratches head-?
Frank
Also, I see what you mean about the two speeds, it says 1500 and 6000... but I thought the spindle drive varied the frequency and by extension the RPMs infinitely. Tried googleing for 2 speed induction motor but nothing particularly enlightening comes back. -Scratches head-?
Frank
Last edit: 14 Aug 2012 23:49 by dangercraft.
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14 Aug 2012 23:57 #23218
by dangercraft
Replied by dangercraft on topic Re:New Build - Tree VMC 1000
Spoke too soon... google comes to the rescue.
From what I understand this motor must be wired so that it has 4 poles or 16 poles depending on how the fields are wired? So I am guessing I should be able to wire the fields as four poles and then plug it into a VFD?
Frank
From what I understand this motor must be wired so that it has 4 poles or 16 poles depending on how the fields are wired? So I am guessing I should be able to wire the fields as four poles and then plug it into a VFD?
Frank
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15 Aug 2012 06:58 #23227
by andypugh
Replied by andypugh on topic Re:New Build - Tree VMC 1000
Yes, wiring for 4-pole operation looks like the way to go.
You could look at having a mess of relays to switch modes if you later found you needed to.
How many wires actually go from the motor to the drive?
You could look at having a mess of relays to switch modes if you later found you needed to.
How many wires actually go from the motor to the drive?
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15 Aug 2012 18:04 #23249
by robh
Replied by robh on topic Re:New Build - Tree VMC 1000
the rated on CNC stuff on spindles are issues in
Constant rating, ie all day 24/7 use
and a30min over load rating
hope that helps with the KW rating
so u have
15 KW 30min rating @ 6000rpm
11KW Cont @ 6000rpm
Constant rating, ie all day 24/7 use
and a30min over load rating
hope that helps with the KW rating
so u have
15 KW 30min rating @ 6000rpm
11KW Cont @ 6000rpm
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15 Aug 2012 20:45 - 15 Aug 2012 20:56 #23265
by dangercraft
Replied by dangercraft on topic Re:New Build - Tree VMC 1000
I received the manuals last night, it looks like the motor fields are hardwired for 4 poles already. I was able to find out the model number of the spindle drive, its a Yasakawa VS-626MT III.
I found the link to the factory manual here:
www.yaskawa.com/site/dmspindle.nsf/link2...VU/$file/NTR0010.pdf
I would like to swap out the spindle drive, mostly because from the manual this thing seems like its just WAY to complicated (headache.) The only thing that has me thinking is that the MAX voltage on the motor says 200V where as if I used an automation direct VFD, the output voltage is the same as the input voltage, so if my installation is 240V it'll try and feed 240V to the motor, at least thats my understanding. Do you think this would be an issue? I guess the other option would be to put a transformer on each phase going into the VFD and step the voltage down to 200V. Honestly that makes me a little nervous because power transmission is not something I am too familliar with. What do you all think?
If I did keep the Yasakawa drive, it wants +-10V for the speed reference, I assume I could just plug the spindle reference input to one of the 6 +-10V output channels from a 7i77, same as with the servos?
Frank
I found the link to the factory manual here:
www.yaskawa.com/site/dmspindle.nsf/link2...VU/$file/NTR0010.pdf
I would like to swap out the spindle drive, mostly because from the manual this thing seems like its just WAY to complicated (headache.) The only thing that has me thinking is that the MAX voltage on the motor says 200V where as if I used an automation direct VFD, the output voltage is the same as the input voltage, so if my installation is 240V it'll try and feed 240V to the motor, at least thats my understanding. Do you think this would be an issue? I guess the other option would be to put a transformer on each phase going into the VFD and step the voltage down to 200V. Honestly that makes me a little nervous because power transmission is not something I am too familliar with. What do you all think?
If I did keep the Yasakawa drive, it wants +-10V for the speed reference, I assume I could just plug the spindle reference input to one of the 6 +-10V output channels from a 7i77, same as with the servos?
Frank
Last edit: 15 Aug 2012 20:56 by dangercraft.
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- PCW
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15 Aug 2012 20:51 #23266
by PCW
Replied by PCW on topic Re:New Build - Tree VMC 1000
If you use a standard analog servo interface like the 7I77, you have a +-10V analog signal available for the spindle
(the 7I76 step/dir interface does only have 0-10V)
(the 7I76 step/dir interface does only have 0-10V)
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- JR1050
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15 Aug 2012 23:21 #23275
by JR1050
Replied by JR1050 on topic Re:New Build - Tree VMC 1000
For what it is worth.....Yaskawa gear is very durable,its fail rate is pretty low.The 626 is a very good drive,If you remove it,you will have more then just a drive to replace,as the drive and motor are an integrated system.
As of now,all that is required for Emc to run your spindle is a voltage and an enable and/or a removal of inhibit signal.If you replace the existing drive,you will need a drive and some sort of braking unit minimum.If you go cheap,say a Hitachi SJ700,you are looking at about $2500, 1800 for the drive,200 for the encoder card and about 500 for the braking unit and resistors.Yes it is a new drive,but I doubt you will see any difference in the performance of the spindle.A new drive will need to be programmed(about 100 parameters).
I have the same drive on my Matsurra's,but with a 10hp motor and the spindle is unstoppable!! I have old MX-1 controls on them,so rigid tapping isnt a option.
Admittingly,fixing yaskawa stuff isnt cheap,but it doesnt fail much.You said you have Siemens motors,these to are durable.You seem to have lucked out in not having Siemens drives,these do suck and Seimens is BRUTAL on repair costs.
I found this out the hard way,all electrolytic caps in old drives go bad,when they go,they take out other components.Replacing ALL the caps in all your drives is super cheap insurance.
Ill buy the 626 mkIII if you are really gonna boot it,let me know....
As of now,all that is required for Emc to run your spindle is a voltage and an enable and/or a removal of inhibit signal.If you replace the existing drive,you will need a drive and some sort of braking unit minimum.If you go cheap,say a Hitachi SJ700,you are looking at about $2500, 1800 for the drive,200 for the encoder card and about 500 for the braking unit and resistors.Yes it is a new drive,but I doubt you will see any difference in the performance of the spindle.A new drive will need to be programmed(about 100 parameters).
I have the same drive on my Matsurra's,but with a 10hp motor and the spindle is unstoppable!! I have old MX-1 controls on them,so rigid tapping isnt a option.
Admittingly,fixing yaskawa stuff isnt cheap,but it doesnt fail much.You said you have Siemens motors,these to are durable.You seem to have lucked out in not having Siemens drives,these do suck and Seimens is BRUTAL on repair costs.
I found this out the hard way,all electrolytic caps in old drives go bad,when they go,they take out other components.Replacing ALL the caps in all your drives is super cheap insurance.
Ill buy the 626 mkIII if you are really gonna boot it,let me know....
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20 Aug 2012 23:46 - 20 Aug 2012 23:56 #23453
by dangercraft
Replied by dangercraft on topic Re:New Build - Tree VMC 1000
Now that I have the manuals, I've spent the last few days taking the machine apart, cleaning it and doing some research on the different motion control components. This is what I have been able to figure out:
On the servos and drives:
The servos are MSI 7Kw AC servos, however the encoders on the servos are analog units, they out put a reference pulse, a sin voltage and a cos voltage relative to the position. The motors are connected to the ballscrew through a 1:1 belt drive to the ball screw unit. There is a digital encoder attached directly to the end of the ballscrew, this encoder is fed directly to the Dynapath Control.
The drives are also MSI 7kw AC drives, the analog encoder output from the motors are fed directly to the MSI drive.
From what I have been able to find out, there are no parts or support for these drives and servos. I can't even find manuals to be able to know what kind of inputs they want.
For the X,Y and Z joints, I decided I am going to swap the drives and servo motors for some (newish) used Mitsubishi motors and drives of the same capacity using +-10V velocity mode. I may or may not continue to use the existing external digital encoders since, I would rather have my external position reference from linear scales attached directly to the table and spindle assembly (assuming I can fit everything inside the way covers.)
JR, I understand your point, however, I have a question (for anyone): What would be the difference between the current Yaskawa spindle drive or the Hitachi drive you mentioned and say an Automation Direct GS3 drive with Brake resistor run V/H, +-10V control so that the spindle encoder is fed directly to linuxcnc and linuxcnc can take care of the closed loop operation? Is this not a viable option? The one thing I can see is that the current spindle motor is rated for 200V max and the VFD's have seen (and also the Hitachi inverter drive you mentioned) all say the output voltage is the same as the input. I guess I would just run a transformer to the spindle drive to bring the input and output voltage of the spindle drive from 240V to 200V to not fry the spindle motor? To clarify, I would like to be able to keep the option of rigid tapping on this machine, though when possible I'd probably be thread-milling.
Frank
On the servos and drives:
The servos are MSI 7Kw AC servos, however the encoders on the servos are analog units, they out put a reference pulse, a sin voltage and a cos voltage relative to the position. The motors are connected to the ballscrew through a 1:1 belt drive to the ball screw unit. There is a digital encoder attached directly to the end of the ballscrew, this encoder is fed directly to the Dynapath Control.
The drives are also MSI 7kw AC drives, the analog encoder output from the motors are fed directly to the MSI drive.
From what I have been able to find out, there are no parts or support for these drives and servos. I can't even find manuals to be able to know what kind of inputs they want.
For the X,Y and Z joints, I decided I am going to swap the drives and servo motors for some (newish) used Mitsubishi motors and drives of the same capacity using +-10V velocity mode. I may or may not continue to use the existing external digital encoders since, I would rather have my external position reference from linear scales attached directly to the table and spindle assembly (assuming I can fit everything inside the way covers.)
JR, I understand your point, however, I have a question (for anyone): What would be the difference between the current Yaskawa spindle drive or the Hitachi drive you mentioned and say an Automation Direct GS3 drive with Brake resistor run V/H, +-10V control so that the spindle encoder is fed directly to linuxcnc and linuxcnc can take care of the closed loop operation? Is this not a viable option? The one thing I can see is that the current spindle motor is rated for 200V max and the VFD's have seen (and also the Hitachi inverter drive you mentioned) all say the output voltage is the same as the input. I guess I would just run a transformer to the spindle drive to bring the input and output voltage of the spindle drive from 240V to 200V to not fry the spindle motor? To clarify, I would like to be able to keep the option of rigid tapping on this machine, though when possible I'd probably be thread-milling.
Frank
Last edit: 20 Aug 2012 23:56 by dangercraft.
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